The present study investigates the role of dispositional need for closure (NFC) in how individuals within a particular culture perceive and appreciate choice. Data sets from the US (283 adults), Europe (263 adults and 427 students), China (218 adults and 309 students) and Singapore (258 students) were collected. The results showed that in Western cultures, people perceived choice in a linear way as either a burden or a blessing, whereas in Chinese culture, such opposition between perspectives did not appear, and individuals generally saw choice as both burden and blessing simultaneously. In Western cultures, high dispositional NFC was strongly associated with viewing choice-as-a-burden, whereas Chinese respondents with a high need for closu...
Three cross-cultural studies conducted among U.S. and Indian adults compared perceptions of helping ...
The study examines cross-cultural and gender differences in decision making and decision-making styl...
Value-based choices are influenced both by powerful counterfactuals, such as regret, and also by ris...
The present study investigates the role of dispositional need for closure (NFC) in how individuals w...
The present study investigates the role of dispositional need for closure (NFC) in how individuals w...
We argue that a way culture influences decisions is through the reasons that individuals recruit whe...
We argue that a way culture influences decisions is through the reasons that individuals recruit whe...
The present research investigated the relationship between individual differences in maximizing vers...
We argue that a way culture influences decisions is through the reasons that individuals recruit whe...
The present research investigated the relationship between individual differences in maximizing vers...
The present research investigated the relationship between individual differences in maximizing vers...
This article explores the effects of two cultural dimensions, face consciousness and risk aversion, ...
Previous research has suggested that stability of self-concept differs across cultures: in North Ame...
Previous research has suggested that stability of self-concept differs across cultures: in North Ame...
In this article, the effect of culture on decisional self-esteem, decisional stress, and self-report...
Three cross-cultural studies conducted among U.S. and Indian adults compared perceptions of helping ...
The study examines cross-cultural and gender differences in decision making and decision-making styl...
Value-based choices are influenced both by powerful counterfactuals, such as regret, and also by ris...
The present study investigates the role of dispositional need for closure (NFC) in how individuals w...
The present study investigates the role of dispositional need for closure (NFC) in how individuals w...
We argue that a way culture influences decisions is through the reasons that individuals recruit whe...
We argue that a way culture influences decisions is through the reasons that individuals recruit whe...
The present research investigated the relationship between individual differences in maximizing vers...
We argue that a way culture influences decisions is through the reasons that individuals recruit whe...
The present research investigated the relationship between individual differences in maximizing vers...
The present research investigated the relationship between individual differences in maximizing vers...
This article explores the effects of two cultural dimensions, face consciousness and risk aversion, ...
Previous research has suggested that stability of self-concept differs across cultures: in North Ame...
Previous research has suggested that stability of self-concept differs across cultures: in North Ame...
In this article, the effect of culture on decisional self-esteem, decisional stress, and self-report...
Three cross-cultural studies conducted among U.S. and Indian adults compared perceptions of helping ...
The study examines cross-cultural and gender differences in decision making and decision-making styl...
Value-based choices are influenced both by powerful counterfactuals, such as regret, and also by ris...